OSI/AS and OSI/TS Supplement (Includes RFC-1006 Support)

OSI/AS SCF Commands Changed to Support RFC-1006
RFC-1006 Changes to the SCF, SPI, and PTrace Subsystems
3–16 107751 Tandem Computers Incorporated
ADD ENTRY #APPL The following
attribute-specs
for the ADD ENTRY #APPL command have new
meaning when using RFC-1006:
[ L3SERVER
indirect-process-name
]
[ NSAP
string
]
L3SERVER (ZL3-SERVR)
defines the name of the TCP/IP process that establishes the TCP connection for
this #APPL entry. This attribute is used only for local entry names.
Value: An NSP process name in the following format:
$
osi-mgr-name
.#NSP.
internal-name
Default: No default value is provided.
NSAP (ZNSAP)
defines the IP address for the local or remote #APPL entry being added.
Value: Dotted decimal notation or eight-digit hexadecimal string.
Default: No default value is provided.
ADD ENTRY #NSAP The following
attribute-spec
for the ADD ENTRY #NSAP command has a new
meaning when using RFC-1006:
[ NETADDR-MODE { NORMAL | X25-1980 } ]
NETADDR-MODE (ZNETADDR-MODE)
When TCP/IP is the NSP, OSI/AS uses the NSAP entry to specify IP addresses.
OSI/AS only uses the NSAP entry when the NETADDR field is set to NORMAL.
If NETADDR is set to X25-1980, NSAP entries are not forwarded to OSI/TS from
OSI/AS.
Value: NORMAL | X25-1980. For TCP/IP networks, NORMAL is the only
value that can be used.
Default: NORMAL
ADD ENTRY #SNPA The SNPA entry name only represents a Tandem internal number, not the real local
SNPA address. It is used internally to eventually associate an NSP process with an
NSAP address (IP address). The NSP process handles all connections that use the
specified NSAP address. For more details on internal numbers, refer to the SCF
Reference Manual for Tandem OSI/AS.